Vocational education and training is at the heart of economic performance. Programs, curricula and quality frameworks have been established. The crucial question remains: Does this result in reliable competence for the labor market? The critical point is not curriculum design, but implementation at the grassroots level. Only if this succeeds reliably will training quality become effective.
Vocational qualifications with demonstrable performance improve employability. This is not achieved through programs alone, but through the consistent interaction of learning and working.
If this interaction works, graduates become productive more quickly. Familiarization times decrease and post-qualification is reduced. At the same time, qualifications become more meaningful. They become reliable signals in the labor market. Companies can recruit faster and more reliably. The fit improves, misallocations decrease and productivity becomes effective earlier.
Between concept and reality
Vocational education and training is conceptually controlled by learning objectives, modules and quality standards. In everyday life, however, it takes place in the interaction between the company, training institution and assessment. Different logics come together in this interplay: company requirements are geared towards productivity, curricula towards planned skills development and assessment systems towards formal criteria.
These logics are each coherent in themselves, but are not automatically coordinated. It is at this interface that it is decided whether training quality is effective in everyday life.
Everyday life as the decisive level
A vocational training system proves its quality under real conditions. Deviations are part of normality: companies react to orders, curricula continue to run, assessments follow defined procedures.

The central question is therefore whether a system remains consistent under these conditions. Ensuring training quality in everyday life means that the coordination of learning locations, continuous further development and compliance with quality requirements are clearly accountable and reliably implemented.
Practical relevance: Work-based learning
Work-based learning is the central reference for skills development in the context of Bhartiya Skill University BSDU. Learning does not take place in isolation from practice, but in real work situations. Work-Based Learning is the place where competence development takes place and is accompanied in a structured manner within the framework of quality assurance and governance. Students are involved in processes and learn to actively shape them. Knowledge of the necessary tools and their application is also taught so that these become a sustainable component of professional competence.
The quality of work-based learning depends on how consistently these logics are coordinated. The task is to consistently coordinate the operational reality and the curricular objectives and to systematically ensure the development of skills.
Work-based learning shows whether a system works and whether the desired training quality is ensured on a day-to-day basis.
The real strength lies in the controls
Work-based learning is effective where the connection between learning and working is actively managed. The job is what counts in the company. In the curriculum, the planned development. In the assessment, the comprehensible performance. If these levels are consistently coordinated, practice and experience become the vehicle for skills development. Learning objectives become effective in the work process and the assessment reliably reflects real performance.
The task is to ensure this connection operationally. Competence development becomes consistent when activities, learning objectives and performance records are constantly related to each other. Any deviations must be made visible and used in a targeted manner in order to continue development. This fine-tuning requires binding rules and structured management.
Conclusion
An education system can be formally correct. Without a coordinated combination of practice, learning objectives and assessment, no reliable competence is created. The decisive factor is the ability to function in everyday life. Where this control is consistently implemented, a system is created that works in everyday life and reliably ensures training quality.
Do you have any questions about the project?
Send an e‑mail to: contact@joshi-foundation.ch
We will be happy to answer your question.
JCF Program Team
Rajendra and Ursula Joshi Foundation / DualEdu Bridge India
Rolf Siebold
For more insights into the development of skill universities and practice-oriented higher education, visit DualEdu Bridge India’s LinkedIn page.

